Good
evening and welcome to this press conference. Today we welcomed Bruno
Le Maire, the new Minister for the Economy of the French government. We
all look forward to working together with him. We had to say goodbye to
Michael Noonan, who has announced that he will step down from his post.
He could still be with us for the June meeting but I didn't want to take
the chances of missing his farewell, so we thanked him for all the work
he has done for Ireland and for the eurozone.
I
will only speak about Greece, because I think it is the only topic of
interest to you tonight. We have made huge progress on the policy
package on which so much work had been done in the last months and on
which an agreement had been reached between Greece and the institutions.
The Eurogroup, of course, welcomed that very much. We are also very
positive on the work done in Greece to implement those agreed measures
and reforms in prior actions. The Commissioner will say more about that,
but a lot of work has already been done in Greece by the Greek
government and they are committed to continue that work as soon as
possible, so that we can work towards that next disbursement before the
summer.
Having
said that, on debt sustainability, we have always said that if there
was an agreement on the second review - and I think we are close to
formally closing the second review, with a positive outcome - if there
is agreement on that, that would open up the debt discussion to see
where we are in terms of debt sustainability. This afternoon and this
evening we had a first in-depth discussion on the topic of debt
sustainability, looking very carefully at needs, options, constraints.
But at this point, we have not reached an overall agreement on that part
of our discussion. In the coming weeks, we will continue our work on
that. We will try to come to an definite conclusion in the next
Eurogroup meeting which will be in 3 weeks time. We will use that time
well to work hard with the institutions and all member states involved.
The
Eurogroup today has made quite clear that it is ready and prepared to
specify further what could be envisaged if needed, in terms of debt
relief. Of course, there are two guiding principles for the Eurogroup:
that it needs to be inside the package that we had already agreed on 16
May, and that the final decision on what is actually needed and will be
put in place, in terms of debt relief, will be taken at the end of the
programme.
The
IMF today also made it clear that they welcomed very much the progress
made. They are impressed by the reforms and the work done by the Greeks
and they still stand ready to go to the board. But they will also wait
for the final discussion that we hope to have in 3 weeks time, in the
next Eurogroup, on the issue of debt.
So
overall - positive developments from Greece, lots of work done tonight.
I think we are very close to that agreement. But tonight, we were
unable to close a possible gap between what could be done and what some
of us had expected should or could be done. We need to close that by
looking at the additional options or by adjusting our expectations. Both
are possible, and perhaps both should be done. That I think will surely
bring us to a more positive and definite conclusion at the next
Eurogroup, in June.
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